Data from: Skill not athleticism predicts individual variation in match performance of soccer players
Just as evolutionary biologists endeavor to link phenotypes to fitness, sport scientists try to identify traits that determine athlete success. Both disciplines would benefit from collaboration, and to illustrate this, we used an analytical approach common to evolutionary biology to isolate the phen...
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Zusammenfassung: | Just as evolutionary biologists endeavor to link phenotypes to fitness,
sport scientists try to identify traits that determine athlete success.
Both disciplines would benefit from collaboration, and to illustrate this,
we used an analytical approach common to evolutionary biology to isolate
the phenotypes that promote success in soccer, a complex activity of
humans played in nearly every modern society. Using path analysis, we
quantified the relationships among morphology, balance, skill,
athleticism, and performance of soccer players. We focused on performance
in two complex motor activities: a simple game of soccer tennis (1 on 1),
and a standard soccer match (11 on 11). In both contests, players with
greater skill and balance were more likely to perform better. However,
maximal athletic ability was not associated with success in a game. A
social network analysis revealed that skill also predicted ball movement,
as determined using social network analyses. The relationships between
phenotypes and success during individual and team sports have potential
implications for how selection acts on these phenotypes, in humans and
other species, and thus should ultimately interest evolutionary
biologists. Hence, we propose a field of evolutionary sports science that
lies at the nexus of evolutionary biology and sports science. This would
allow biologists to take advantage of the staggering quantity of data on
performance in sporting events to answer evolutionary questions that are
more difficult to answer for other species. In return, sports scientists
could benefit from the theoretical framework developed to study natural
selection in non-human species. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.16vd4 |